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MONDAY EDITION: Beautiful day on the island, Sunny and 70 predicted....10 and 15 still the place to be...a wire and 100 watts and you can work the world...

Winamp Taken Down: Too Good For This Open Source World

If you picked today in your hackerspace’s sweepstake on when Winamp would pull their code repository, congratulations! You’re a winner! The source for the Windows version of the venerable music player was released on GitHub three weeks ago, and after some derision over its licence terms, a bunch of possible open source violations, and the inadvertent release of some proprietary third-party code, it’s been taken down. We’re sure that if you still have a burning desire to look at it then it won’t be too difficult to find a copy through your favorite search engine, leaving the question of what really just happened.

It’s fairly obvious that the owners of the code lacked some level of understanding of just what open source really is, based on their not-really-open licence and all those code leaks. They did back down on not allowing people to create forks, but it’s evident that they didn’t anticipate the reaction they got. So were they merely a bit clueless, or was it all just a publicity stunt involving a piece of software that’s now of more historical than practical interest? It’s possible we’ll never know, but the story has provided those of us sitting on the fence eating popcorn with some entertainment.

Results of the 2024 USA/IARU Region 2 Radio Orienteering Championships

The 23rd USA and 12th IARU Region 2 Radio Orienteering Championships, held October 5 – 13, 2024, brought together more than 50 competitors from 13 U.S. states, as well as participants from Canada, Australia, Uganda, and China.

Set in the scenic parks and forests near Chelsea, Dexter, Pinckney, and Brighton, Michigan, the event was organized by the Southern Michigan Orienteering Club (SMOC), with…

Read more American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources – Read More

Amateur Radio Newsline Report

PROPOSAL MOVES AHEAD TO HARMONIZE 40M BAND IN REGION 3

JIM/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to IARU Region 3 where a study of the 40m band's varied allocations has produced a proposal to harmonize the band. The recommendations could ultimately have a far-reaching effect in other regions. Graham Kemp VK4BB brings us up to date.

GRAHAM: A proposal to harmonise use of the 40m band across Region 3 of the IARU will be taken up by members at the next conference, in the hopes that this may lead to even broader harmonisation with IARU Regions 1 and 2.

The IARU's proposal is the result of a recent consultation by the Wireless Institute of Australia with the goal of finding band plans for various modes that could ultimately form the basis of a global agreement. The committee noted in its report that one of its biggest challenges was to settle on an equitable redistribution of use of the spectrum based on activity and demand within the various modes. The proposal noted that very little spectrum is set aside for the digital modes and discusses the potential use of channelisation of the bands for digital modes. To deal with the challenge of allocations that include SSB and CW, the committee studied, among other things, activity shown on ClubLog.

In addition to its intent to change some things, the committee reaffirmed the need to retain certain longstanding rules: the start of CW operation from the bottom of the band and SSB operation from the top, with data modes occupying the boundary area between the two.

The proposal asks for accommodations for emergency traffic so as to limit the possibility of QRM from other amateur activity.

To download the full proposal in PDF format, visit the link that appears in the text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

This is Graham Kemp VK4BB.

**
ROMANIAN TEEN SETS NEW RECORD FOR CW CALLSiGN COPY

JIM/ANCHOR: Congratulations were given freely in Tunisia to a young Romanian ham who set a new world record while competing in the 20th IARU High Speed Telegraphy World Championship. Thirteen-year-old Ianis Scutaru, YO8YNS, won a gold medal and broke the record he set last year in the category of Callsign Receiving. According to the competition's website, his total score of 311,192 points represent his maximum copy speed of 1,126 characters per minute - an equivalent just exceeding 225 words per minute.

An announcement on the championship's website said: [quote] "This remarkable achievement showcases not only Ianis's dedication and skill but also the talent of the Romanian ham radio community." [endquote]

His father, Lucian, YO8SLC, told Newsline in an email that Ianis has been a ham for a little less than six years.

(IARU HST WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP, LUCIAN YO8SLC)

**
ARDC NAMES NEW DIRECTOR OF TECHNOLOGY

JIM/ANCHOR: A veteran of software development has been named the new director of technology for Amateur Radio Digital Communications. We hear about him from Jack Parker W8ISH.

JACK: Congratulations to software developer Schuyler Erle NØGIS who has joined the team at Amateur Radio Digital Communications as its new director of technology. Announcing his arrival on their website, ARDC called Schuyler uniquely qualified for the post because of his long history in open source software development, ham radio and wireless technology and engineering management. He has been a licensed ham since 2011 and is a former member of the Auxiliary Communications Service in San Francisco, California, which operates in times of crisis.

Schuyler is the coauthor of "Mapping Hacks," published in 2005 by O’Reilly Media. The book explores the potential held by Free / Open Source geographic information systems. In Sonoma County, California, he was able to establish a cooperative that helped bring high-speed Internet access to a rural community living in the coastal hills.

This is Jack Parker W8ISH.

(ARDC)

**
WRTC 2026 ANNOUNCES UK EVENT HEADQUARTERS SITE

JIM/ANCHOR: Organizers of the World Radiosport Team Championship to be held in the UK in 2026 have announced the location of the headquarters hotel. Jeremy Boot G4NJH brings us the news.

JEREMY: Organisers of the prestigious World Radiosport Team Championship have announced that its headquarters will be Wyboston Lakes in Bedford in the east of England. Mark MØDXR, chairman of the UK organising committee, said that anyone interested in attending the event as a spectator will be able to book their place through the WRTC 2026 website starting in 2025. The WRTC will feature 50 competing two-person teams operating throughout the counties of Cambridgeshire, Suffolk and Norfolk.

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

(WRTC)

**
SKCC SEEKS QSL CARD DESIGNS FOR STRAIGHT KEY MONTH 2025

JIM/ANCHOR: It's not too early to start thinking about January 2025 and Straight Key Month, an event run by the Straight Key Century Club. Randy Sly W4XJ explains why.

RANDY: If you think that the Straight Key Century Club may have designs on the future, you're right. As the club does every year, it is extending an invitation to its members to submit an imaginative and attractive QSL card to be sent out following the annual Straight Key Month activity in January. The K3Y event will mark the club's 19th anniversary.

In mid-December the submitted designs will be presented to club members for a vote. The most popular design will appear on the official K3Y QSL card and, as before, 12 other top selections will appear in the SKCC's print calendar.

The popular event, which begins on the 2nd of January - following the ARRL's Straight Key Night - features club members calling CQ from all 13 regional call areas in the US and from countries in six IARU continental regions.

If you don't have a copy of this year's calendar and want to see some of the most popular designs created by members, visit the link in the text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

**
NEW HAM SHACK ON PENNSYLVANIA CAMPUS IS ALSO RESEARCH TOOL

JIM/ANCHOR: Having a new ham radio shack is always something worth celebrating, but what if your new shack also happens to be a valuable research tool and a center for the education of university students? Travis Lisk N3ILS takes us to one such shack on the campus of the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania.

TRAVIS: The new radio shack inside the Loyola Science Center at the University of Scranton offers a vast view of the city five floors below. The state-of-the-art amateur radio equipment that make up this station offers a view of the world beyond and the electromagnetic activity above that provides the means by which we radio amateurs make HF contacts.

This is the new shack for the W3USR Amateur Radio Club, which was founded four years ago. This is not just a headquarters for student operators on campus but a research resource for students and faculty members who are involved in HamSCI, the citizen-scientist investigation group led by university professor Nathaniel Frissell, W2NAF. The shack will become a busy place as HamSCI conducts its experiments funded by benefactors such as NASA, the National Science Foundation and Amateur Radio Digital Communications. Outside, a 40-foot tower has antennas for HF, VHF/UHF satellite and microwave frequencies, with some antennas on rotators.

The shack officially opens its doors on Friday the 25th of October. The open house includes a public dedication ceremony and a lecture, followed by a buffet dinner for those who hold tickets to that event.

**
SPECIAL EVENT RECALLS MARITIME DISASTER IN 1922

JIM/ANCHOR: Shipwrecks have always fascinated one radio amateur in Wisconsin -- but none more than the sinking of a rail car ferry that killed everyone on board in 1922. The activation of a special event tells its story, as we hear from Paul Braun WD9GCO.

PAUL: From the time he was a youngster, maritime stories and disasters always held a fascination for Nathan Banks, KC9HYY. When he recently learned of the tragic sinking of the SS Milwaukee Rail Car Ferry, the October 22nd, 1922 disaster hit close to home for this Milwaukee area native. This wasn't like the Titanic, the Andrea Doria or the Lusitania - this was a local story that held him spellbound. Nathan, who has been a ham for two decades, will be on the air for the inaugural special event station N9M from the 21st through to the 23rd of October. A special QSL card will be available for those working the station either on SSB, FT8, FT4 and possibly CW.

Nathan hopes to spread the word about the ship's long career transporting train cars and the stories about the crew members who died when the vessel was swallowed up by Lake Michigan. There were no survivors. The wreck lies at the lake's bottom, 3 miles offshore, north of Milwaukee.

This is Paul Braun WD9GCO.

(NATHAN BANKS, KC9HYY)

**
BROADCASTER IN STOLEN-TOWER CASE DIES

JIM/ANCHOR: The Alabama broadcaster who told police his AM radio station's tower was stolen last February, has died. Brett Elmore, owner and general manager of WJLX in Jasper, Alabama, made headlines after reporting to authorities that the station’s transmitter and 200-foot stainless-steel AM tower had been stolen mysteriously overnight.

The case has not been solved. News reports gave no cause of the broadcaster's death. He was 41.

(RADIO WORLD, WIAT-TV)

**
HOT AIR BALLOON CRASH DESTROYS RADIO TOWER

JIM/ANCHOR: In New Mexico, more trouble for broadcast radio towers: The tower of an AM radio station in Albuquerque collapsed after being struck by a hot air balloon from the nearby International Balloon Fiesta on Friday October 11th. The talk radio station, KKOB-770 AM, shut its 50,000-watt transmitter as the pilot and his passengers, two young boys, descended a ladder on the tower near where the balloon had become entangled. No injuries were reported.. The station stayed on the air at 96.3 FM. Local news media reported that, ironically, it was 20 years ago to the day that another balloon, also bearing the likeness of Smokey Bear, crashed into the same tower.

(RADIO INSIGHT, KRGE.COM)

**
WORLD OF DX

In the World of DX, listen for Kazu, MØCFW on the air as 3B9/MØCFW from Rodrigues Island, IOTA number AF-017, from the 22nd through to the 30th of October. Listen for him during the CQ WW DX SSB Contest. operating as 3B9KW. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

Bernie, ZS4TX, and John, ZS6JON will be on the air from Lesotho on 70 cm EME using the callsign 7P8Z. The grid square is KG30. They will do two moon passes starting on Friday the 18 of October at 18:00 UTC moonrise and ending Sunday the 20th of October at 05:00 UTC moonset. They will also do some satellite passes which include the ISS, if available, RS-44 and SO-50. QSL via PA3CMC and LoTW.

Listen for Vasco 7Q7CT, Jorge CT1BOL, Vasco D2ACE and Fran EC7R who will be using the callsign 7Q1 - Seven Quebec One - from Malawi between the 23rd of October and the 2nd of November. Listen for them in the CQ WW DX SSB Contest. QSL via EA7FTR.

Saty, JE1JKL will be operating as 9M6NA from Labuan Island, IOTA number OC-133, in East Malaysia from the 23rd of October to the 25th of November. Listen for him in the CQ WW DX SSB Contest and the CQ WW DX CW Contest. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

(425 DX BULLETIN)

**
KICKER: REPEATER TRANSMITS A SPIRIT MIGHTIER THAN ANY HURRICANE

JIM/ANCHOR: Our final story takes us to the mountains of North Carolina, where the voices on the Mount Mitchell repeater carry hope amid hurricane wreckage. Andy Morrison K9AWM shares their story.

ANDY: Many of the hams who call rural North Carolina home consider the region's Mount Mitchell repeater their home as well. The repeater, owned by Randy Johnston, N2GE, also became their refuge and their lifeline while the deadly force of Hurricane Helene tore their communities and their lives apart. Lynn Moose, KI4ZEK, was on the repeater on Friday, September 27th, as neighbors checked in to say they'd survived the winds and the floodwaters - as many looked for loved ones and sought help. Later, Dan K2DMG, who is part of Iredell County Emergency Communications, stepped in to relieve Lynn as net control as Lynn went to assess damages at his own home. Dan was able to pass emergency traffic until he found himself on the road to Florida where his parents were awaiting the arrival of Hurricane Milton. At that point, Vicki AD3I got on the air to help coordinate volunteers and resources.

The repeater, however, passed more than traffic and reassurance during the two weeks of rescue and recovery. During moments when the repeater was less active, Lynn read a poem that his wife had found posted on Facebook, written by a North Carolina woman named Elizabeth Greene Silvers. With that poem, the repeater now transmitted hope to a devastated community. These words are a part of that affirmation - [quote]: "Yet we still rise, with mountains high, for in these hills, our spirits fly." [endquote]

FRIDAY EDITION:

Static Electricity And The Machines That Make It

Static electricity often just seems like an everyday annoyance when a wool sweater crackles as you pull it off, or when a doorknob delivers an unexpected zap. Regardless, the phenomenon is much more fascinating and complex than these simple examples suggest. In fact, static electricity is direct observable evidence of the actions of subatomic particles and the charges they carry.

While zaps from a fuzzy carpet or playground slide are funny, humanity has learned how to harness this naturally occurring force in far more deliberate and intriguing ways. In this article, we’ll dive into some of the most iconic machines that generate static electricity and explore how they work.

Fail of the Week: The Case of the Curiously Colored Streetlights

What color are the street lights in your town? While an unfortunate few still suffer under one of the awful colors offered by vapor discharge lamps, like the pink or orange of sodium or the greenish-white of mercury, most municipalities have moved to energy-saving LED streetlights, with a bright white light that’s generally superior in every way. Unless, of course, things go wrong and the lights start to mysteriously change colors.

If you’ve noticed this trend in your area, relax; [NanoPalomaki] has an in-depth and surprisingly interesting analysis of why LED streetlights are changing colors. After examining a few streetlights removed from service thanks to changing from white to purple, he discovered a simple explanation. White LEDs aren’t emitting white light directly; rather, the white light comes from phosphors coating the underlying LED, which emits a deep blue light. The defunct units all showed signs of phosphor degradation. In some cases, the phosphors seemed discolored, as if they experienced overheating or chemical changes. In other LEDs the phosphor layer was physically separated from the backing, exposing the underlying LEDs completely. The color of these damaged modules was significantly shifted toward the blue end of the spectrum, which was obviously why they were removed from service.

Now, a discolored LED here and there does not exactly constitute a streetlight emergency, but it’s happening to enough cities that people are starting to take notice. The obvious solution would be for municipalities to replace the dodgy units Even in the unlikely event that a city would get some compensation from the manufacturer, this seems like an expensive proposition. Luckily, [NanoPalomaki] tested a solution: he mixed a wideband phosphor into a UV-curable resin and painted it onto the lens of each defective LED in the fixture. Two coats seemed to do the trick.

We have to admit that we have a hard time visualizing a city employee painstakingly painting LEDs when swapping out a fixture would take an electrician a few minutes, but at least it’s an option. And, it’s something for hobbyists and homeowners faced with the problem of wonky white LEDs to keep in mind too.

What Is It?

Before we look at the fancy science gear, we should actually define what we’re talking about here. In simple terms, static electricity is the result of an imbalance of electric charges within or on the surface of a material. While positively-charged protons tend to stay put, electrons, with their negative charges, can move between materials when they come into contact or rub against one another. When one material gains electrons and becomes negatively charged, and another loses electrons and becomes positively charged, a static electric field is created. The most visible result of this is when those charges are released—often in the form of a sudden spark.

Since it forms so easily on common materials, humans have been aware of static electricity for quite some time. One of the earliest recorded studies of the phenomenon came from the ancient Greeks. Around 1000 BC, they noticed that rubbing amber with fur would then allow it to attract small objects like feathers. Little came of this discovery, which was ascribed as a curious property of amber itself. Fast forward to the 17th century, though, and scientists were creating the first machines designed to intentionally store or generate static electricity. These devices helped shape our understanding of electricity and paved the way for the advanced electrical technologies we use today. Let’s explore a few key examples of these machines, each of which demonstrates a different approach to building and manipulating static charge.

The Leyden Jar

An 1886 drawing of Andreas Cunaeus experimenting with his apparatus. In this case, his hand is helping to store the charge. Credit: public domain

Though not exactly a machine for generating static electricity, the Leyden jar is a critical part of early electrostatic experiments. Effectively a static electricity storage device, it was independently discovered twice, first by a German named Ewald Georg von Kleist in 1745. However, it gained its common name when it was discovered by Pieter van Musschenbroek, a Dutch physicist, sometime between 1745 and 1746. The earliest versions were very simple, consisting of water in a glass jar that was charged with static electricity conducted to it via a metal rod. The experimenter’s hand holding the jar served as one plate of what was a rudimentary capacitor, the water being the other. The Leyden jar thus stored static electricity in the water and the experimenter’s hand.

Eventually the common design became a glass jar with layers of metal foil both inside and outside, separated by the glass. Early experimenters would charge the jar using electrostatic generators, and then discharge it with a dramatic spark.

The Leyden jar is one of the first devices that allowed humans to store and release static electricity on command. It demonstrated that static charge could be accumulated and held for later use, which was a critical step in understanding the principles that would lead to modern capacitors. The Leyden jar can still be used in demonstrations of electrostatic phenomena and continues to serve as a fascinating link to the history of electrical science.

The Van de Graaff Generator

A Van de Graaff generator can be configured to run in either polarity, depending on the materials chosen and how it is set up. Here, we see the generator being used to feed negative charges into an attached spherical conductor. Credit: Omphalosskeptic, CC BY-SA 3.0

Perhaps the most iconic machine associated with generating static electricity is the Van de Graaff generator. Developed in the 1920s by American physicist Robert J. Van de Graaff, this machine became a staple of science classrooms and physics demonstrations worldwide. The device is instantly recognizable thanks to its large, polished metal sphere that often causes hair to stand on end when a person touches it.

The Van de Graaff generator works by transferring electrons through mechanical movement. It uses a motor-driven belt made of insulating material, like rubber or nylon, which runs between two rollers. At the bottom roller, plastic in this example, a comb or brush (called the lower electrode) is placed very close to the belt. As the belt moves, electrons are transferred from the lower roller onto the belt due to friction in what is known as the triboelectric effect. This leaves the lower roller positively charged and the belt carrying excess electrons, giving it a negative charge. The electric field surrounding the positively charged roller tends to ionize the surrounding air and attracts more negative charges from the lower electrode.

As the belt moves upward, it carries these electrons to the top of the generator, where another comb or brush (the upper electrode) is positioned near the large metal sphere. The upper roller is usually metal in these cases, which stays neutral rather than becoming intensely charged like the bottom roller. The upper electrode pulls the electrons off the belt, and they are transferred to the surface of the metal sphere. Because the metal sphere is insulated and not connected to anything that can allow the electrons to escape, the negative charge on the sphere keeps building up to very high voltages, often in the range of hundreds of thousands of volts. Alternatively, the whole thing can be reversed in polarity by changing the belt or roller materials, or by using a high voltage power supply to charge the belt instead of the triboelectric effect.

The result is a machine capable of producing massive static charges and dramatic sparks. In addition to its use as a demonstration tool, Van de Graaff generators have applications in particle physics. Since they can generate incredibly high voltages, they were once used to accelerate particles to high speeds for physics experiments. These days, though, our particle accelerators are altogether more complex. 


The Whimsical Wimshurst Machine

Two disks with metal sectors spin in opposite directions upon turning the hand crank. A small initial charge is able to induce charge in other sectors as the machine is turned. Credit: public domain

Another fascinating machine for generating static electricity is the Wimshurst machine, invented in the late 19th century by British engineer James Wimshurst. While less famous than the Van de Graaff generator, the Wimshurst machine is equally impressive in its operation and design.

The key functional parts of the machine are the two large, circular disks made of insulating material—originally glass, but plastic works too. These disks are mounted on a shared axle, but they rotate in opposite directions when the hand crank is turned. The surfaces of the disks have small metal sectors—typically aluminum or brass—which play a key role in generating static charge. As the disks rotate, brushes made of fine metal wire or other conductive material lightly touch their surfaces near the outer edges. These brushes don’t generate the initial charge but help to collect and amplify it once it is present.

The key to the Wimshurst machine’s operation lies in a process called electrostatic induction, which is essentially the influence that a charged object can exert on nearby objects, even without touching them. At any given moment, one small area of the rotating disk may randomly pick up a small amount of charge from the surrounding air or by friction. This tiny initial charge is enough to start the process. As this charged area on the disk moves past the metal brushes, it induces an opposite charge in the metal sectors on the other disk, which is rotating in the opposite direction.

For example, if a positively charged area on one disk passes by a brush, it will induce a negative charge on the metal sectors of the opposite disk at the same position. These newly induced charges are then collected by a pair of metal combs located above and below the disks. The combs are typically connected to Leyden jars to store the charge, until the voltage builds up high enough to jump a spark over a gap between two terminals.

It is common to pair a Wimshurst machine with Leyden jars to store the generated charge. Credit: public domain

The Wimshurst machine doesn’t create static electricity out of nothing; rather, it amplifies small random charges through the process of electrostatic induction as the disks rotate. As the charge is collected by brushes and combs, it builds up on the machine’s terminals, resulting in a high-voltage output that can produce dramatic sparks. This self-amplifying loop is what makes the Wimshurst machine so effective at generating static electricity.

The Wimshurst machine is seen largely as a curio today, but it did have genuine scientific applications back in the day. Beyond simply using it to investigate static electricity, its output could be discharged into Crookes tubes to create X-rays in a very rudimentary way.

The Electrophorus: Simple Yet Ingenious

One of the simplest machines for working with static electricity is the electrophorus, a device that dates back to 1762. Invented by Swedish scientist Johan Carl Wilcke, the electrophorus consists of two key parts: a flat dielectric plate and a metal disk with an insulating handle. The dielectric plate was originally made of resinous material, but plastic works too. Meanwhile, the metal disk is naturally conductive.

An electrophorus device, showing the top metal disk, and the bottom dielectric material, at times referred to as the “cake.” The lower dielectric was classically charged by rubbing with fur. Credit: public domain

To generate static electricity with the electrophorus, the dielectric plate is first rubbed with a cloth to create a static charge through friction. This is another example of the triboelectric effect, as also used in the Van de Graaff generator. Once the plate is charged, the metal disk is placed on top of it. The disc then becomes charged by induction. It’s much the same principle as the Wimshurst machine, with the electrostatic field of the dielectric plate pushing around the charges in the metal plate until it too has a distinct charge.

For example, if the dielectric plate has been given a negative charge by rubbing, it will repel negative charges in the metal plate to the opposite side, giving the near surface a positive charge, and the opposite surface a negative charge. The net charge, though, remains neutral. But, if the metal disk is then grounded—for example, by briefly touching it with a finger—the negative charge on the disk can drained away, leaving it positively charged as a whole. This process does not deplete the charge on the dielectric, so it can be used to charge the metal disk multiple times, though the dielectric’s charge will slowly leak away in time.

Though it’s simple in design, the electrophorus remains a remarkable demonstration of static electricity generation and was widely used in early electrostatic experiments. A particularly well-known example is that of Georg Lichtenberg. He used a version a full two meters in diameter to create large discharges for his famous Lichtenberg figures. Overall, it’s an excellent tool for teaching the basic principles of electrostatics and charge separation—particularly given how simple it is in construction compared to some of the above machines.

Zap

Static electricity, once a mysterious and elusive force, has long since been tamed and turned into a valuable tool for scientific inquiry and education. Humans have developed numerous machines to generate, manipulate, and study static electricity—these are just some of the stars of the field. Each of these devices played an important role in furthering humanity’s understanding of electrostatics, and to a degree, physics in general.

Today, these machines continue to serve as educational tools and historical curiosities, offering a glimpse into the early days of electrical science—and they still spark fascination on the regular, quite literally. Static electricity may be an everyday phenomenon, but the machines that harness its power are still captivating today. Just go to any local science museum for the proof!

 

Amateur Radio Newsline Report

PROPOSAL MOVES AHEAD TO HARMONIZE 40M BAND IN REGION 3

JIM/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to IARU Region 3 where a study of the 40m band's varied allocations has produced a proposal to harmonize the band. The recommendations could ultimately have a far-reaching effect in other regions. Graham Kemp VK4BB brings us up to date.

GRAHAM: A proposal to harmonise use of the 40m band across Region 3 of the IARU will be taken up by members at the next conference, in the hopes that this may lead to even broader harmonisation with IARU Regions 1 and 2.

The IARU's proposal is the result of a recent consultation by the Wireless Institute of Australia with the goal of finding band plans for various modes that could ultimately form the basis of a global agreement. The committee noted in its report that one of its biggest challenges was to settle on an equitable redistribution of use of the spectrum based on activity and demand within the various modes. The proposal noted that very little spectrum is set aside for the digital modes and discusses the potential use of channelisation of the bands for digital modes. To deal with the challenge of allocations that include SSB and CW, the committee studied, among other things, activity shown on ClubLog.

In addition to its intent to change some things, the committee reaffirmed the need to retain certain longstanding rules: the start of CW operation from the bottom of the band and SSB operation from the top, with data modes occupying the boundary area between the two.

The proposal asks for accommodations for emergency traffic so as to limit the possibility of QRM from other amateur activity.

To download the full proposal in PDF format, visit the link that appears in the text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

This is Graham Kemp VK4BB.

**
ROMANIAN TEEN SETS NEW RECORD FOR CW CALLSiGN COPY

JIM/ANCHOR: Congratulations were given freely in Tunisia to a young Romanian ham who set a new world record while competing in the 20th IARU High Speed Telegraphy World Championship. Thirteen-year-old Ianis Scutaru, YO8YNS, won a gold medal and broke the record he set last year in the category of Callsign Receiving. According to the competition's website, his total score of 311,192 points represent his maximum copy speed of 1,126 characters per minute - an equivalent just exceeding 225 words per minute.

An announcement on the championship's website said: [quote] "This remarkable achievement showcases not only Ianis's dedication and skill but also the talent of the Romanian ham radio community." [endquote]

His father, Lucian, YO8SLC, told Newsline in an email that Ianis has been a ham for a little less than six years.

(IARU HST WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP, LUCIAN YO8SLC)

**
ARDC NAMES NEW DIRECTOR OF TECHNOLOGY

JIM/ANCHOR: A veteran of software development has been named the new director of technology for Amateur Radio Digital Communications. We hear about him from Jack Parker W8ISH.

JACK: Congratulations to software developer Schuyler Erle NØGIS who has joined the team at Amateur Radio Digital Communications as its new director of technology. Announcing his arrival on their website, ARDC called Schuyler uniquely qualified for the post because of his long history in open source software development, ham radio and wireless technology and engineering management. He has been a licensed ham since 2011 and is a former member of the Auxiliary Communications Service in San Francisco, California, which operates in times of crisis.

Schuyler is the coauthor of "Mapping Hacks," published in 2005 by O’Reilly Media. The book explores the potential held by Free / Open Source geographic information systems. In Sonoma County, California, he was able to establish a cooperative that helped bring high-speed Internet access to a rural community living in the coastal hills.

This is Jack Parker W8ISH.

(ARDC)

**
WRTC 2026 ANNOUNCES UK EVENT HEADQUARTERS SITE

JIM/ANCHOR: Organizers of the World Radiosport Team Championship to be held in the UK in 2026 have announced the location of the headquarters hotel. Jeremy Boot G4NJH brings us the news.

JEREMY: Organisers of the prestigious World Radiosport Team Championship have announced that its headquarters will be Wyboston Lakes in Bedford in the east of England. Mark MØDXR, chairman of the UK organising committee, said that anyone interested in attending the event as a spectator will be able to book their place through the WRTC 2026 website starting in 2025. The WRTC will feature 50 competing two-person teams operating throughout the counties of Cambridgeshire, Suffolk and Norfolk.

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

(WRTC)

**
SKCC SEEKS QSL CARD DESIGNS FOR STRAIGHT KEY MONTH 2025

JIM/ANCHOR: It's not too early to start thinking about January 2025 and Straight Key Month, an event run by the Straight Key Century Club. Randy Sly W4XJ explains why.

RANDY: If you think that the Straight Key Century Club may have designs on the future, you're right. As the club does every year, it is extending an invitation to its members to submit an imaginative and attractive QSL card to be sent out following the annual Straight Key Month activity in January. The K3Y event will mark the club's 19th anniversary.

In mid-December the submitted designs will be presented to club members for a vote. The most popular design will appear on the official K3Y QSL card and, as before, 12 other top selections will appear in the SKCC's print calendar.

The popular event, which begins on the 2nd of January - following the ARRL's Straight Key Night - features club members calling CQ from all 13 regional call areas in the US and from countries in six IARU continental regions.

If you don't have a copy of this year's calendar and want to see some of the most popular designs created by members, visit the link in the text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

This is Randy Sly W4XJ.

[DO NOT READ: https://skccgroup.com/k3y/k3y-docs/SKCC_Calendar_2024.pdf ]

(SKCC)

**
NEW HAM SHACK ON PENNSYLVANIA CAMPUS IS ALSO RESEARCH TOOL

JIM/ANCHOR: Having a new ham radio shack is always something worth celebrating, but what if your new shack also happens to be a valuable research tool and a center for the education of university students? Travis Lisk N3ILS takes us to one such shack on the campus of the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania.

TRAVIS: The new radio shack inside the Loyola Science Center at the University of Scranton offers a vast view of the city five floors below. The state-of-the-art amateur radio equipment that make up this station offers a view of the world beyond and the electromagnetic activity above that provides the means by which we radio amateurs make HF contacts.

This is the new shack for the W3USR Amateur Radio Club, which was founded four years ago. This is not just a headquarters for student operators on campus but a research resource for students and faculty members who are involved in HamSCI, the citizen-scientist investigation group led by university professor Nathaniel Frissell, W2NAF. The shack will become a busy place as HamSCI conducts its experiments funded by benefactors such as NASA, the National Science Foundation and Amateur Radio Digital Communications. Outside, a 40-foot tower has antennas for HF, VHF/UHF satellite and microwave frequencies, with some antennas on rotators.

The shack officially opens its doors on Friday the 25th of October. The open house includes a public dedication ceremony and a lecture, followed by a buffet dinner for those who hold tickets to that event.

This is Travis Lisk N3ILS.

**
SPECIAL EVENT RECALLS MARITIME DISASTER IN 1922

JIM/ANCHOR: Shipwrecks have always fascinated one radio amateur in Wisconsin -- but none more than the sinking of a rail car ferry that killed everyone on board in 1922. The activation of a special event tells its story, as we hear from Paul Braun WD9GCO.

PAUL: From the time he was a youngster, maritime stories and disasters always held a fascination for Nathan Banks, KC9HYY. When he recently learned of the tragic sinking of the SS Milwaukee Rail Car Ferry, the October 22nd, 1922 disaster hit close to home for this Milwaukee area native. This wasn't like the Titanic, the Andrea Doria or the Lusitania - this was a local story that held him spellbound. Nathan, who has been a ham for two decades, will be on the air for the inaugural special event station N9M from the 21st through to the 23rd of October. A special QSL card will be available for those working the station either on SSB, FT8, FT4 and possibly CW.

Nathan hopes to spread the word about the ship's long career transporting train cars and the stories about the crew members who died when the vessel was swallowed up by Lake Michigan. There were no survivors. The wreck lies at the lake's bottom, 3 miles offshore, north of Milwaukee.

This is Paul Braun WD9GCO.

(NATHAN BANKS, KC9HYY)

**
BROADCASTER IN STOLEN-TOWER CASE DIES

JIM/ANCHOR: The Alabama broadcaster who told police his AM radio station's tower was stolen last February, has died. Brett Elmore, owner and general manager of WJLX in Jasper, Alabama, made headlines after reporting to authorities that the station’s transmitter and 200-foot stainless-steel AM tower had been stolen mysteriously overnight.

The case has not been solved. News reports gave no cause of the broadcaster's death. He was 41.

(RADIO WORLD, WIAT-TV)

**
HOT AIR BALLOON CRASH DESTROYS RADIO TOWER

JIM/ANCHOR: In New Mexico, more trouble for broadcast radio towers: The tower of an AM radio station in Albuquerque collapsed after being struck by a hot air balloon from the nearby International Balloon Fiesta on Friday October 11th. The talk radio station, KKOB-770 AM, shut its 50,000-watt transmitter as the pilot and his passengers, two young boys, descended a ladder on the tower near where the balloon had become entangled. No injuries were reported.. The station stayed on the air at 96.3 FM. Local news media reported that, ironically, it was 20 years ago to the day that another balloon, also bearing the likeness of Smokey Bear, crashed into the same tower.

(RADIO INSIGHT, KRGE.COM)

**
WORLD OF DX

In the World of DX, listen for Kazu, MØCFW on the air as 3B9/MØCFW from Rodrigues Island, IOTA number AF-017, from the 22nd through to the 30th of October. Listen for him during the CQ WW DX SSB Contest. operating as 3B9KW. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

Bernie, ZS4TX, and John, ZS6JON will be on the air from Lesotho on 70 cm EME using the callsign 7P8Z. The grid square is KG30. They will do two moon passes starting on Friday the 18 of October at 18:00 UTC moonrise and ending Sunday the 20th of October at 05:00 UTC moonset. They will also do some satellite passes which include the ISS, if available, RS-44 and SO-50. QSL via PA3CMC and LoTW.

Listen for Vasco 7Q7CT, Jorge CT1BOL, Vasco D2ACE and Fran EC7R who will be using the callsign 7Q1 - Seven Quebec One - from Malawi between the 23rd of October and the 2nd of November. Listen for them in the CQ WW DX SSB Contest. QSL via EA7FTR.

Saty, JE1JKL will be operating as 9M6NA from Labuan Island, IOTA number OC-133, in East Malaysia from the 23rd of October to the 25th of November. Listen for him in the CQ WW DX SSB Contest and the CQ WW DX CW Contest. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

(425 DX BULLETIN)

**
KICKER: REPEATER TRANSMITS A SPIRIT MIGHTIER THAN ANY HURRICANE

JIM/ANCHOR: Our final story takes us to the mountains of North Carolina, where the voices on the Mount Mitchell repeater carry hope amid hurricane wreckage. Andy Morrison K9AWM shares their story.

ANDY: Many of the hams who call rural North Carolina home consider the region's Mount Mitchell repeater their home as well. The repeater, owned by Randy Johnston, N2GE, also became their refuge and their lifeline while the deadly force of Hurricane Helene tore their communities and their lives apart. Lynn Moose, KI4ZEK, was on the repeater on Friday, September 27th, as neighbors checked in to say they'd survived the winds and the floodwaters - as many looked for loved ones and sought help. Later, Dan K2DMG, who is part of Iredell County Emergency Communications, stepped in to relieve Lynn as net control as Lynn went to assess damages at his own home. Dan was able to pass emergency traffic until he found himself on the road to Florida where his parents were awaiting the arrival of Hurricane Milton. At that point, Vicki AD3I got on the air to help coordinate volunteers and resources.

The repeater, however, passed more than traffic and reassurance during the two weeks of rescue and recovery. During moments when the repeater was less active, Lynn read a poem that his wife had found posted on Facebook, written by a North Carolina woman named Elizabeth Greene Silvers. With that poem, the repeater now transmitted hope to a devastated community. These words are a part of that affirmation - [quote]: "Yet we still rise, with mountains high, for in these hills, our spirits fly." [endquote]

 

THURSDAY EDITION: 10 meters to be the best bang for your buck in ham radio....worked dozens of countries yesterday without the amplifier,,,,try a few repeaters on 10 as well, they are a hoot!

Turn Your Android Phone into a Ham Radio with this Open-Source Project

A clever hack to make your phone more useful!

A ham radio, or amateur radio, as it is known more formally, is a type of radio communication device that is used by many people to communicate over large distances for a multitude of things.

 

The most popular use case for such devices is for relaying emergency communication during natural/man-made disasters, facilitating information sharing between first responders and people trapped in a remote disaster-struck area.

Of course, there are more casual uses for ham radios too. Many people connect with other ham radio operators from around the world to have a conversation, learn about the person/people on the other end, enter contests, and more.

 

However, traditional ham radio setups are bulky, sitting on top of a desk with antennas, a mic, and the radio itself.

What if I told you that there is an open source project that allows you to convert your Android smartphone into a portable ham radio?

Join me as I take you through an interesting DIY project.

Amateur Radio Daily: HAARP Active for Routine Tests and Maintenance

Date: October 14, 2024
To: Amateur Radio & Radio Astronomy Communities
From: HAARP Program Office
Subject: Notice of Transmission

The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) will be performing routine systems
testing and maintenance on October 15-17 UTC, with operating times specified in the table below.
Operating frequencies will be 3.3 MHz, 5.8 MHz, and 9.6 MHz. All information is subject to change.
For more information on research at HAARP, see the online HAARP FAQ at
https://haarp.gi.alaska.edu/faq.

October 15
1700-2400 UTC
3.3, 5.8, 9.6 MHz

October 16
1700-2400 UTC
3.3, 5.8, 9.6 MHz

October 17
1700-2400 UTC
3.3, 5.8, 9.6

Each frequency will be transmitted in four different directions.

There are no specific data collection requests for these transmissions, but reception reports are welcome and may be submitted to uaf-gi-haarp@alaska.edu.

Source: HAARP

WEDNESDAY EDITION: Coffee and donuts at the club today if you are in the area...Dave at HRO, change the 75 foot to 100 foot on the rotor cable please....

SpaceX notches 100th launch of 2024 with Starlink mission on Falcon 9 rocket

SpaceX broke its own record for number of orbital launches performed by one company, which it set at 96 in 2023. The Starlink 10-10 mission put SpaceX at 97 orbital flights with two-and-a-half months still remaining in the year.

The Falcon 9 launch also marked SpaceX’s 100th total launch of 2024, including three suborbital launches of its Starship rocket from southern Texas. Liftoff happened at 2:10 a.m. EDT (0610 UTC) from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

The Falcon 9 first stage booster supporting this mission, tail number B1080 in the SpaceX fleet, launched for an 11th time. It previously flew two private astronaut missions to the International Space Station (Axiom-2 and Axiom-3), two Cargo Dragon missions to the ISS (NG-21 and CRS-30) and the Euclid space telescope for the European Space Agency (ESA).

A little more than eight minutes after liftoff, B1080 touched down on the SpaceX droneship, ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas.’ This marked the 81st booster landing for ASOG and the 353rd booster landing to date.

Onboard the mission are 23 Starlink V2 Mini satellites. This was the first launch of Starlink satellites since the upper stage anomaly occurred during the Crew-9 mission on Sept. 28. The last batch of Starlink satellites launched during the Starlink 9-8 mission on Sept. 25.

During the Crew-9 mission, after the Crew Dragon Freedom spacecraft separated from the upper stage, the Merlin Vacuum Engine fired for an additional 500 milliseconds during the deorbit burn, which caused the stage to move outside of its planned landing zone to burn up over the Pacific Ocean.

The issue was investigated by SpaceX in a mishap investigation overseen by the Federal Aviation Administration and checked by NASA in an independent review. Since the mishap, SpaceX successfully launched both a Falcon 9 rocket on the Hera asteroid mission for ESA and a Falcon Heavy rocket on the Europa Clipper mission for NASA.

Microsoft Azure CTO: US data centers will soon hit size limits

The data centers that make generative AI products like ChatGPT possible will soon reach size limits, according to Microsoft Azure Chief Technology Officer Mark Russinovich, necessitating a new method of connecting multiple data centers together for future generations of the technology.

The most advanced AI models today need to be trained inside a single building where tens (and soon hundreds) of thousands of AI processors, such as Nvidia’s H100s, can be connected so they act as one computer.

But as Microsoft and its rivals compete to build the world’s most powerful AI models, several factors, including America’s aging energy grid, will create a de facto cap on the size of a single data center, which soon could consume multiple gigawatts of power, equivalent to hundreds of thousands of homes.  STORY

TUESDAY EDITION: Sunny and cold, fine by me....

As Hurricanes Disrupt Phone Service, Amateur Radio Comes In Clear

Radio became the one form of communication left in rural North Carolina after Helene took out power and cell service.

The morning after Hurricane Helene pummeled the eastern seaboard of the U.S., Thomas Witherspoon inspected the damage to his western North Carolina home. The night before, he listened to the wind whip down trees and snap power lines along the two-mile access road connecting his family to their few neighbors in Buncombe County.

Like the tens of thousands of other North Carolina residents, the power to Witherspoon’s neighborhood was completely out. It was impossible to communicate with the house down the road, let alone anyone several miles away. Unable to send text messages or make phone calls, radio became the one form of communication left in rural North Carolina. After fixing what he could on his own property, Witherspoon, a lifelong amateur radio enthusiast, began distributing handheld radios to his neighbors.

“Amateur radio is one of those things you get into because of your love of radio communications and the technical aspects of it or the community and the challenges that you can overcome,” Witherspoon said. “It’s a lot of fun, but underlying all of that is this prime directive with amateur radio that it’s always there as emergency communications when all else fails.”

Other amateur radio enthusiasts have helped out as well. Two weeks ago, operators fielded requests for medications, like insulin, and announced when grocery stores, like Sam’s Club, reopened. Most of the messages were to let friends and family know that they’re OK.

“Mom, your son is OK. No phone service. Happy birthday,” one caller asked an operator to send his mother during a livestream of the broadcast.

Hurricanes have wreaked havoc on the United States over the past month. More than 200 people have been confirmed dead as a result of Helene and many more have gone missing, making it the most destructive U.S. hurricane since Katrina in 2005. Nearly a week after Helene made landfall, cell service dead zones plagued the Carolinas, leaving thousands of residents unable to reach their friends, families, and even emergency responders. As Hurricane Milton built in the Gulf of Mexico last week, radio operators in Florida were also preparing to launch their net — a group of operators communicating live over the air. Scott Roberts, an amateur radio section manager for northern Florida, said that operators in his area started checking their equipment and making plans to deploy to shelters as of last Monday.

There are more than 1 million licensed radio amateurs in the U.S. like Witherspoon and Roberts, according to a Federal Communications Commission spokesperson. Some amateur radio bands are short bands, reaching only small communities of people, while others cover hundreds and even thousands of miles. When communication infrastructure fails, like cellular networks during a natural disaster, the FCC allows for amateur radio operators to assist in recovery efforts.

Gordon Mooneyhan, spokesperson for the American Radio Relay League, said he knows of three main repeaters being used to convey messages inside the disaster area from Hurricane Helene, including the Mt. Mitchell Repeater, which is located at the highest point in North Carolina at 6,600 feet and boosts localized radio broadcasts to a wider network. This is where Witherspoon read off supply requests and road closures.

Messages are sent digitally using what is essentially a modem, linking a computer to the radio and turning the messages into a form of high-speed morse code with the Winlink Global Radio Email system.

“You type the message, and it will automatically calculate the word count and send it to the next station,” said Mooneyhan. “The next station automatically sends back what the word count is supposed to be, so it’s all verified and there aren’t any errors.”

Whether a message out of the disaster zone is bound for a neighboring state or a family member in Asia, there are operators everywhere capable of getting it where it needs to go.

“You wanna go to Texas? They’ll find a net that’s taking traffic to Texas, sign in, relay the message, and deliver it,” said Mooneyhan.

As of last Monday, telecommunications companies were still putting up temporary towers to restore cell phone connectivity in North Carolina. AT&T and T-Mobile had deployed mobile units where residents could drive to connect their phones to Wi-Fi and send messages. For many residents, the simplest method of reaching a loved one was speaking into a handheld radio.

As Hurricane Milton grew into a category 5 storm last Monday, amateur radio operators in Florida were already preparing to respond if the state’s communications infrastructure fails.

“Florida amateur radio operators are perfectly equipped to handle Hurricane Milton, even just after Hurricane Helene,” said Josh Johnston, the director of emergency management for the Amateur Radio Emergency Service. “They have the systems in place and have a well-refined action plan in each county, as well as at the state level. They’re quite accustomed to busy storm seasons, and ready to provide critical information to served agencies as Milton comes through.”

“It’s not as nice as getting a phone call from a loved one,” said Mooneyhan, “but if you’re in an area where the cell service and land lines are totally disrupted, a message saying ‘I’m OK, everyone’s fine, don’t worry,’ that beats the heck out of not knowing.”

The K7RA Solar Update

Thanks to Carl, K9LA for contributing to this week's bulletin.

"SUBJ: ASWFC GEOMAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WARNING ISSUED AT 2220 UTC/10 OCTOBER 2024 BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE.

"A halo CME first observed on 09-Oct arrived at Earth at 10/1515UT, resulting in G4 geomagnetic conditions on 10-Oct. G4 geomagnetic conditions are expected on 11-Oct, with a chance of G5. G2 geomagnetic conditions are expected on 12-Oct, with a chance of G3 due to ongoing CME effects.

"INCREASED GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY EXPECTED DUE TO CORONAL MASS EJECTION FROM 11-13 OCTOBER 2024

"GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY FORECAST

11 Oct: G4, chance of G5

12 Oct: G2, chance of G3

13 Oct: G0-G1"

Only four new sunspot groups emerged this week. The first was on October 4, another on October 6 and two more on October 7.

Average daily sunspot number moved from 160 (Sep 26-Oct 2 period) to 182 (Oct 3-9 period), and average daily solar flux from 199 to 270.

Predicted solar flux is 215 on October 11-13, 210 on October 14-15, 200 and 205 on October 16-17, and 170 on October 18-21, then 175, 180, 185, 190, 195, 215, 230, 240, 250 and 255 on October 22-31, then 230 and 215 on November 1-2, then 205 on November 3-4, 200 and 185 on November 5-6, 175 on November 7-12, and 170 on November 13-17.

Predicted planetary A index reveals a huge disturbance at 122, 42, 12 and 12 on October 11-14, 5 on October 15-21, then 15, 10, 5, 5, 12 and 8 on October 22-27, 5 on October 28 til November 2, 12 and 8 on November 3-4, 5 on November 5-7, 8 on November 8, and 5 on November 9-17.

"Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere for October 10, 2024 from OK1HH.

"During the first ten days of October, the number of sunspot groups dropped from eleven to five, but the eruptive activity of the two largest sunspot groups did not decrease. Not only are moderate flares (M-classes, of which 34 were observed) frequent, but large events (X-classes) are also relatively common (five effects were observed, including one proton flare on 9 October). Several CMEs (coronal mass ejections) were also observed.

"After the two most active regions in particular moved to the western half of the solar disk, geomagnetic activity has increased significantly since 6 October. The most significant impacts on the state of the ionosphere were on 8 October. This will be followed by a very slow return to normal, lasting several days. A calm development can be expected after mid-October."

Reader Allison King sent this: https://nyti.ms/3YiNZtP

David Moore sent this. A new era of solar observation:

 

MONDAY EDITION: I just had $700 of tree work done at the club so the second tower beams can swing without hitting limbs. I need to replace the rotor and I don't climb anymore nor do any of the guys in the club, all 130 of them. I need to find someone to swap a rotor out, next issue....tower is only 30 feet tall and tied to the building, standing on the roof would do the trick.

Celebrations mark first transglobal two-way radio communication

This week marks the centenary of the world’s very first transglobal two-way radio communication.

On 18 October 1924 Frank Bell, 4AA, from New Zealand, and Cecil Goyder, 2SZ, from North London, changed the way in which we communicate forever by making contact on the amateur bands.

To commemorate this historic contact, special call signs will be active, and awards and QSL cards will be available for those who make contact with these special stations. GB2NZ and ZM100DX have already been active since the start of the month. Starting Monday, 14 October 2024 until 20 October 2024 calls reflecting Goyder’s call sign, G2SZ, and Bell’s, ZL4AA, will be active. This will include activity here in the UK from Mill Hill School in North London which is the original location from which Goyder made his contact.

On Friday, 18 October, radio amateurs will also be recreating and reenacting the first contact between Goyder and Bell. It is hoped that the QSO will be made on a wavelength close to that used in 1924.

To find out more about this unique celebration go to the GB2NZ webpage

 

FRIDAY EDITION: Fall is here, I have one truckload of leaves for the dump today. I do the leaves as they come down, it makes things a lot easier, we have a 170 foot long tree lined driveway of beech and oak trees. Aurora was beautiful to see last night and had a definite effect on signals on 75 last night, spooky....

A Wisconsinite Heads into Milton’s Path on Purpose

MADISON, Wis. (CIVIC MEDIA) – A local is in Florida preparing now to help with hurricane Milton relief, and he’s brought crucial communication tools with him.

A Wisconsinite hit the road ahead of Milton’s landfall and made his way to Tampa, Florida. He’s there now helping with a unique and essential need… communication. As cell phone coverage goes out, it can be days to even a week before your family or loved ones even know if you are dead or alive.

“What I’m offering is communications to talk to the outside world.”

Dan Vanevenhoven is a volunteer with Amateur Radio Emergency Services, he lives in the Fox Valley area and a former Tampa Bay area resident.   STORY

Perkins retires emergency coordinator post

Allen Perkins, N1ATS, has retired from his position as Cumberland County amateur radio emergency coordinator.

A member of the Cumberland Plateau Amateur Radio Club, Perkins stepped into the post several years ago. He has also served as assistant emergency coordinator for 13 counties in District 6.

"Through the years, I have been the direct contact with the amateurs that are set up at the National Weather Service to relay actual and current weather to them from our county," he said. "I have used a map of the county that has been squared off in quadrants so as to locate very close to any possible situations that needed emergency assistance. We have club members throughout the county in those squares that can relay actual and current severe weather at the time of occurrence."

Perkins added, "This has been my calling and I regret that I am stepping down as EC, but I will let the person that takes my place that I will still be available if needed and will still be net control for severe weather."

Perkins and his wife, Sandy, moved to Cumberland County in January 2009, months after he retired from Irving Oil LLC of Canada and USA. A former assistant emergency coordinator in Cumberland County, ME, he said part of his retirement plans was to devote time to his beloved hobby of amateur — or ham — radio.

"After a few months here I was advised that many amateurs would meet at the Dairy Queen Monday-Friday in the morning for a chat session," he said. "It was there I met Wayne Alley K4MGE. He was at the time the EC for the county and after our friendship bloomed, he asked me if I would like to accept a passion as AEC for the county. Being involved in law enforcement many years ago and 33 years' military experience, I accepted his invitation."

Perkins remembers Alley was well known and respected at the county Emergency Management Agency office. He introduced Perkins to Keith Garrison, then EMA director, who Perkins describes as down to earth and dedicated to his position and Cumberland County.

Working with Garrison, he transmitted to the National Traffic Service, the nation's information center for amateur radio.

When Garrison retired, Perkins continued his work with EMA and Garrison's successor, Rick Smith.

W3USR Ham Radio Station Dedication Oct. 25 (Pennsylvania)

The University of Scranton will dedicate a state-of-the-art amateur radio station that serves students in the University’s W3USR Amateur Radio Club and is also used for physics courses and research by students and faculty participating with the Ham Radio Science Citizen Investigation (HamSCI) project led by Nathaniel Frissell, Ph.D., associate professor of physics and engineering at Scranton. Research conducted using the facility has been supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF), NASA, the Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC) foundation and other organizations.

Located on the fifth floor of the Loyola Science Center, the main station has floor to ceiling glass walls with sweeping views of the city of Scranton. Last academic year, a 40-foot tower with a Skyhawk High Frequency antenna for 14, 21, and 28 MHz, as well as VHF/UHF satellite and microwave antennas, some with rotating mounts were installed, in addition to heavy-duty controllers, all-mode transceivers, speakers, desktop microphones and other components.

Read more – https://bit.ly/3Y20lW3




HAMS YOU MIGHT KNOW

 K1TP- Jon....Editor of As The World Turns....
WB1ABC- Ari..Bought an amp and now we can here him on 75 meters, worships his wife, obsessed with Id'ing
N1BOW-Phil...Retired broadcast engineer, confused and gullible, cheap, only uses singl ply toilet paper
KB1OWO- Larry...Handsome Fellow ,only cuts lawn in August, plows snow the rest in Jackman, Maine
W1GEK- Big Mike....Nearfest Cook, big motor home, electronics software engineer ...
AA1SB- Neil...Living large traveling the country with his girlfriend...loves CW
N1YX- Igor....peddles quality Russian keys, software engineer
K1BGH...Art.....Restores cars and radio gear, nice fella...
N1XW.....Mike-easy going, Harley riding kind of guy!
K1JEK-Joe...Easy going, can be found at most ham flea market ...Cobra Antenna builder..
KA1GJU- Kriss- Tower climbing pilot who cooks on the side at Hosstrader's...
W1GWU-Bob....one of the Hosstrader's original organizers, 75 meter regular, Tech Wizard!!!
K1PV- Roger....75 meter regular, easy going guy...
W1XER...Scott....easy going guy, loves to split cordwood and hunt...
KB1VX- Barry- the picture says it all, he loves food!
KC1BBU- Bob....the Mud Duck from the Cape Cod Canal, making a lot of noise.
W1STS- Scott...philosopher, hat connoisseur,
KB1JXU- Matthew...75 meter regular...our token liberal Democrat out of Florida
K1PEK-Steve..Founder of Davis-RF....my best friend from high school 
K9AEN-John...Easy going ham found at all the ham fests
K1BQT.....Rick....very talented ham, loves his politics, has designed gear for MFJ...
W1KQ- Jim-  Retired Air Force Controller...told quite a few pilots where to go!
N1OOL-Jeff- The 3936 master plumber and ragchewer...
K1BRS-Bruce- Computer Tech of 3936...multi talented kidney stone passing ham...
K1BGH- Arthur, Cape Cod, construction company/ice cream shop, hard working man....
W1VAK- Ed, Cape Cod, lots of experience in all areas, once was a Jacques Cousteus body guard....
K1BNH- Bill- Used to work for a bottled gas company-we think he has been around nitrous oxide to long
W1HHO- Cal...3941 group
K1MPM- Pete...3941 group
WA1JFX- Russell...3941

SILENT KEYS

Silet Key KA1BXB-Don...Regular on 3900 mornings....just don't mention politics to him, please!
Silent Key N1IOM- 3910 colorful regular
Silent Key WS1D- Warren- "Windy" - Bullnet
Silent Key KMIG-Rick....75 Meter Regular....teaches the future of mankind, it's scary!
Silent Key Neil -K1YPM .....a true gentleman
Silent Key K1BXI- John.........Dr. Linux....fine amateur radio op ....wealth of experience...
Silent KeyVA2GJB- Graham...one of the good 14313 guys back in the day.
Silent Key K1BHV- David...PITA
Silent Key W1JSH- Mort...Air Force man
Silent Key K1MAN--Glen....PITA
Silent KeyKB1CJG-"Cobby"- Low key gent can be found on many of the 75 meter nets.........
Silent KeyWB1AAZ- Mike, Antrim, NH, auto parts truck driver-retired
Silent KeyWB1DVD- Gil....Gilly..Gilmore.....easy going, computer parts selling, New England Ham..
Silent Key W1OKQ- Jack....3936 Wheeling and Dealing......keeping the boys on there toes....
Silent Key W1TCS- Terry....75 meter regular, wealth of electronic knowledge...
Silent Key WIPNR- Mack....DXCC Master, worked them all!.. 3864 regular for many years...
Silent Key WILIM- Hu....SK at 92... 3864 regular for many years...
Silent Key N1SIE- Dave....Loves to fly
Silent Key:N1WBD- Big Bob- Tallest ham, at 6'10", of the 3864 group
Silent Key: W1FSK-Steve....Navy Pilot, HRO Salesman, has owned every radio ever built!
Silent Key: W4NTI-Vietnam Dan....far from easy going cw and ssb op on 14275/313
Silent Key:K1FUB-Bill- Loved ham radio....